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EU farm policy until the Uruguay Round Niek Koning Agricultural Economics and Rural Policy
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History of farm policies 1830s-1870s: liberalisation privatisation of government bodies, enclosures etc. trade liberalisation: –British Corn Law repeal (1846), British-French treaty (1860), tariff reductions in other countries From the 1880s: intervention special ministries, support for R&D, land reform etc. protection: –Most West European countries in the 1880s-90s –All other older OECD countries in the 1930s –South Korea and Taiwan in the 1960s-70s
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Real wheat prices (5-year moving average) and farm wages, US & UK (1818 = 100)
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Agricultural productivity in eight European countries, 1870-1910 (in wheat units and prices of 1870)
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Farm policy situation in the 6 founding EU countries All these countries were already protecting their farmers –Germany, France, Italy, Belgium & Luxembourg from the late 19th century –The Netherlands from the 1930s Levels of protection differed between countries –large differences between regions (e.g., Netherlands vs South Germany)
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Formation of the EU (1958): general backgrounds Communist challenge and lessons from the Great Depression social market economy –social security needed to maintain social peace –worker incomes should rise to avoid a new depression –active government intervention should strengthen the position of labour, keep the economy in balance and achieve new welfare aims Franklin Roosevelt Lessons from World War I & II: industrial co-operation between Germany and France as as guarantee against war –agriculture needed to balance the benefits of co-operation between the two countries Monnet & Schuman
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1958 decisions on EU farm policy Policy aims: Rome treaty: reasonable prices for consumers, reasonable incomes for producers, productivity growth Stresa conference: parity aim Policy means: Stresa conference: –single market –unified price support policy –structural policy to reduce regional inequalities –common funding Sicco Mansholt
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EU price policy in the 1960s-70s Principle: supporting a few major products, which will indirectly support other crops 4 ‘heavy’ common market organisations –grains, milk, beef: variable levies, intervention storage, variable export subsidies –sugar: price quotas (A, B and C-sugar) –NB: few production controls, and variable levies / subsidies were a very distortionary instrument! Supplementary ‘light’ common market organisations –pigs, fruits & vegetables, etc. free entry for oilseeds & protein crops (‘Rotterdam loophole’) –concession to the US (Dillon Round) –EU producers supported with direct price subsidies
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world market price domestic price supply price tariff import demand Import tariff
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price quantity demand + storage supply Storage
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demand world market price domestic price supply price export subsidy export Export subsidy
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Butter and grain mountains Increasing costs of surplus disposal –from the outset: dairy –from c. 1980: grain & beef –price subsidies for oilseeds & protein crops These competed with new claims for structural & regional policies –effect of accession of Spain & Portugal Budget ceiling: levy revenue + maximally 1% of VAT-base 1980s: financial crises –farmers: introduce production controls –agro-industrial managers: lower support levels –grain interests: ‘close Rotterdam loophole’ cause of 1/3 of budget costs of price policy however, fixed by international agreement
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EU farm policy reforms of the 1980s Diverging insights on how to solve financial crises –farmers: introduce production controls –agro-industrial managers: lower support levels –grain interests: ‘close Rotterdam loophole’ cause of 1/3 of budget costs of price policy however, fixed by international agreement General political background: social market policies discredited –economic problems of the 1970s –‘back to the market’ –Thatcherism Ongoing tussle about how to limit the costs of surplus disposal –1984: milk quota system –grain: lowering of support prices
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P shadow P prod price quantity Quota Quota rent demand supply Output quota
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A word on decision making Decision making bodies: –Commission: right of initiative –Council: right of veto? (Luxembourg compromise) –Parliament: little power, but right to approve the budget –Court Package deals Leaders of governments versus agricultural ministers –Financial crisis as crowbar
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